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Sohds

The general case of two compounds forming a continuous series of solid solutions may now be considered. The components are completely miscible in the sohd state and also in the hquid state. Three different types of curves are known. The most important is that in which the freezing points (or melting points) of all mixtures lie between the freezing points (or melting points) of the pure components. The equilibrium diagram is shown in Fig. 7, 76, 1. The hquidus curve portrays the composition of the hquid phase in equihbrium with sohd, the composition of... [Pg.32]

The theory of sublimation, t.e. the direct conversion from the vapour to the sohd state without the intermediate formation of the liquid state, has been discussed in Section 1,19. The number of compounds which can be purified by sublimation under normal pressure is comparatively small (these include naphthalene, anthracene, benzoic acid, hexachloroethane, camphor, and the quinones). The process does, in general, yield products of high purity, but considerable loss of product may occur. [Pg.154]

The top of the bench should always be kept clean and dry this can easily be done if a wet and a dry rag are kept at hand. Apparatus not immediately required (a) should be kept as far as possible in a cupboard beneath the bench if it must be placed on the bench, it should be arranged in a neat and orderly manner. All apparatus should be washed immediately after use and placed in a position to drain at the first opportunity, the apparatus should be dried. It must be emphasised that as a general rule a deposit of dirt or tar is more easily removed when it is freshly formed a suitable cleaning agent can usually be found while one still remembers the nature of the material or the circumstances attending its formation. It is hardly necessary to add that sohd waste and filter papers must not be thrown into the sink, and that all operations requiring the handhng of unpleasant and noxious materials sliould be carried out in the fume cupboard ( hood ). [Pg.205]

Nitro-n-hexane. Use 41 g. of dry silver nitrite, 51 g. of n-hexyl iodide (35-5 ml.) and 100 ml. of sodium dried ether. Reflux on a water bath for 8 hours decant the ethereal solution and wash the sohd well with sodium dried ether. Distil the residue, after the removal of the ether from the combined extracts, from 5 g. of dry silver nitrite, and collect the fraction of b.p. 190-192° (13 g.) as 1-nitro -hexane. The pure compound is obtained by distilling under diminished pressure b.p. 81 6°/15 mm. [Pg.307]

Suspend 0 25 g. of 2 4-dinitrophenylhydrazine in 5 ml. of methanol and add 0-4 0-5 ml. of concentrated sulphuric acid cautiously. FUter the warm solution and add a solution of 0 1-0-2 g. of the carbonyl compound in a small volume of methanol or of ether. If no sohd separate within 10 minutes, dUute the solution carefuUy with 2N sulphuric acid. CoUect the solid by suction filtration and wash it with a little methanol. RecrystaUise the derivative from alcohol, dUute alcohol, alcohol with ethyl acetate or chloroform or acetone, acetic acid, dioxan, nitromethane, nitrobenzene or xylene. [Pg.344]

Furfuryl acetate. Reflux a mixture of 39 2 g. (34-8 ml.) of redistilled furfuryl alcohol, 48 g. of glacial acetic acid, 150 ml. of benzene and 20 g. of Zeo-Karb 225/H in a 500 ml. bolt-head flask, using the apparatus described under iaoPropyl Lactate. After 3 hours, when the rate of collection of water in the water separator is extremely slow, allow to cool, separate the resin by suction filtration, and wash it with three 15 ml. portions of benzene. Remove the benzene, etc., from the combined filtrate and washings under reduced pressure (water pump) and then collect the crude ester at 74-90°/10 mm. a small sohd residue remains in the flask. Redistil the crude ester from a Claisen flask with fractionating side arm pure furfuryl acetate passes over at 79-80°/17 mm. The yield is 14 -5 g. [Pg.388]

The above example serves to iUustrate the basis of the procedure employed for the characterisation of aUphatic esters, viz., hydrolysis to, and identification of, the parent acids and alcohols. Most esters are liquids a notable exception is dimethyl oxalate, m.p. 54°. Many have pleasant, often fruit-hke, odours. Many dry esters react with sodium, but less readily than do alcohols hydrogen is evolved particularly on warming, and a sohd sodio derivative may separate on coohng (e.j/., ethyl acetate yields ethyl sodioacetoacetate ethyl adipate gives ethyl sodio cj/cZopentanone carboxylate). [Pg.390]

AUphatic nitriles are usually liquids or low melting point sohds. The most important reaction of a nitrile is its hydrolysis either by an alkaU or by an acid to the corresponding ahphatic acid characterisation of the acid enables the identity of the original nitrile to be established. [Pg.410]

Transfer the reaction product to a 500 ml. Claisen flask and distil over a wire gauze or from an air bath. Some acetyl chloride and acetic acid passes over first, the temperature then rises, and the fraction, b.p. 150-200°, is collected separately run out the water from the condenser when the temperature reaches 150°. The fraction, b.p. 150-200°, solidifies on cooling. Drain off any hquid from the crystals as rapidly as possible, and redistil the solid using an air condenser. CoUect the fraction b.p. 182-192° this sets to a sohd mass on cooling and melts at 63°. The yield of monochloroacetic acid is 150-175 g. [Pg.428]

Vinylacetic acid. Place 134 g. (161 ml.) of allyl cyanide (3) and 200 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid in a 1-htre round-bottomed flask attached to a reflux condenser. Warm the mixture cautiously with a small flame and shake from time to time. After 7-10 minutes, a vigorous reaction sets in and the mixture refluxes remove the flame and cool the flask, if necessary, in cold water. Ammonium chloride crystallises out. When the reaction subsides, reflux the mixture for 15 minutes. Then add 200 ml. of water, cool and separate the upper layer of acid. Extract the aqueous layer with three 100 ml. portions of ether. Combine the acid and the ether extracts, and remove the ether under atmospheric pressure in a 250 ml. Claisen flask with fractionating side arm (compare Fig. II, 13, 4) continue the heating on a water bath until the temperature of the vapour reaches 70°. Allow the apparatus to cool and distil under diminished pressure (compare Fig. II, 20, 1) , collect the fraction (a) distilling up to 71°/14 mm. and (6) at 72-74°/14 mm. (chiefly at 72 5°/ 14 mm.). A dark residue (about 10 ml.) and some white sohd ( crotonio acid) remains in the flask. Fraction (6) weighs 100 g. and is analytically pure vinylacetic acid. Fraction (a) weighs about 50 g. and separates into two layers remove the water layer, dry with anhydrous sodium sulphate and distil from a 50 ml. Claisen flask with fractionating side arm a further 15 g. of reasonably pure acid, b.p. 69-70°/12 mm., is obtained. [Pg.465]

Method 1. From ammonium chloroplatinate. Place 3 0 g. of ammonium chloroplatinate and 30 g. of A.R. sodium nitrate (1) in Pyrex beaker or porcelain casserole and heat gently at first until the rapid evolution of gas slackens, and then more strongly until a temperature of about 300° is reached. This operation occupies about 15 minutes, and there is no spattering. Maintain the fluid mass at 500-530° for 30 minutes, and allow the mixture to cool. Treat the sohd mass with 50 ml. of water. The brown precipitate of platinum oxide (PtOj.HjO) settles to the bottom. Wash it once or twice by decantation, filter througha hardened filter paper on a Gooch crucible, and wash on the filter until practically free from nitrates. Stop the washing process immediately the precipitate tends to become colloidal (2) traces of sodium nitrate do not affect the efficiency of the catalyst. Dry the oxide in a desiccator, and weigh out portions of the dried material as required. [Pg.470]

Pimelic acid. Heat a mixture of 18 g. of pentamethylene dicyanide and 250 g. of 50 per cent, sulphuric acid by weight in a 750 ml. round-bottomed flask under reflux for 9 hours. INIost of the pimehc acid separates from the cold reaction mixture. Filter oflF the crystaUine acid upon a sintered glass funnel. Saturate the filtrate with ammonium sulphate and extract it with three 50 ml. portions of ether. Dissolve the residue on the filter (which is shghtly discoloured, but is fairly pure pimehc acid) in the combined ethereal extracts, dry with anhydrous sodium or magnesium sulphate, and remove the ether by distiUation. Recrystallise the residual sohd acid from benzene containing 5 per cent, of ether. The yield of pure pimehc acid, m.p, 105-106°, is 22 g. [Pg.493]

Nitro compounds, when hquid, have characteristic odours, are insoluble in water, highly refractive and with a density greater than unity. Many are crystalline sohds. Most nitro compounds are slightly coloured, generally yellow the intensity of the colour increases with the number of nitro groups. The following reactions will assist in their detection. [Pg.528]

Reaction with chlorosulphonic acid ( chlorosulphonyl-ation ). Sulphonamides. Many aryl hahdes, either alone or in chloroform solution, when treated with excess of chlorosulphonic acid afford the corresponding sulphonyl chlorides in good yield (compare Section IV.106) the latter may be readily converted into the aryl sulphonamides by reaction with concentrated ammonia solution or with sohd ammonium carbonate. [Pg.543]

Procedure 2. Follow Procedure 1 except that no solvent is employed. Pour the s3Tupy reaction mixture on to crushed ice, remove the resulting aryl sulphonyl chloride and/or sulphone, if a sohd, by filtration with suction and, if a hquid, by means of a small separatory funnel or dropper, and wash with water. [Pg.543]

Add 25 g. of finely-powdered, dry acetanilide to 25 ml. of glacial acetic acid contained in a 500 ml. beaker introduce into the well-stirred mixture 92 g. (50 ml.) of concentrated sulphuric acid. The mixture becomes warm and a clear solution results. Surround the beaker with a freezing mixture of ice and salt, and stir the solution mechanically. Support a separatory funnel, containing a cold mixture of 15 -5 g. (11 ml.) of concentrated nitric acid and 12 -5 g. (7 ml.) of concentrated sulphuric acid, over the beaker. When the temperature of the solution falls to 0-2°, run in the acid mixture gradually while the temperature is maintained below 10°. After all the mixed acid has been added, remove the beaker from the freezing mixture, and allow it to stand at room temperature for 1 hour. Pour the reaction mixture on to 250 g. of crushed ice (or into 500 ml. of cold water), whereby the crude nitroacetanilide is at once precipitated. Allow to stand for 15 minutes, filter with suction on a Buchner funnel, wash it thoroughly with cold water until free from acids (test the wash water), and drain well. Recrystallise the pale yellow product from alcohol or methylated spirit (see Section IV,12 for experimental details), filter at the pump, wash with a httle cold alcohol, and dry in the air upon filter paper. [The yellow o-nitroacetanihde remains in the filtrate.] The yield of p-nitroacetanihde, a colourless crystalline sohd of m.p. 214°, is 20 g. [Pg.581]

Bromo-4-aminotoluene hydrochloride. Transfer the partially dried 3-bromo-4-acetaminotoluene to a 1 5-litre round-bottomed flask, add 250 ml. of rectified spirit, and reflux on a water bath until the sohd dissolves completely. Introduce through the condenser 250 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid to the boihng solution and continue the refluxing for a further 3 hours. During this time crystals of 3-bromo-4-aminotoluene hydrochloride separate. Pour the hot mixture into a 1-Utre beaker and cool thoroughly. Filter the crystals of the hydrochloride at the pump through a Buchner funnel and wash rapidly with two 50 ml. portions of chilled rectified spirit. The yield of the hydrochloride is 150 g. [Pg.605]

Acetates. The acetates of monohydric phenols are usually liquids, but those of di and tri-hydric phenols and also of many substituted phenols are frequently crystaUine sohds. They may be prepared with acetic anhydride as detailed under Amines, Section IV,100,7. [Pg.682]

Dissolve 0 -5 g. of the phenol in 4-5 ml. of dry p ridine, add 1 - 3 g. of 3 5-dinitrobenzoyl chloride and reflux for 25-30 minutes. Pour the cold reaction mixture into 40 ml. of ca. 2N hydrochloric acid. Decant the supernatant aqueous hquid from the precipitated sohd or oil and stir it vigorously with about 10 ml. of N sodium carbonate solution. Filter off the sohd derivative and wash it with water. RecrystaUise from alcohol, dilute alcohol, benzene - acetone or benzene - light petroleum (b.p. 60-80 ),... [Pg.682]

The following alternative method may be used. Dissolve 0 01 mol of the phenol and 0 01 mol of a-naphthyl wo-cyanate in 20 ml. of light petroleum (b.p. 60-80°), add 2 drops of triethylamine (or, less satisfactorily, 2 drops of pyridine), reflux for 5 minutes, and allow to crystallise. Filter oflF the crystalline sohd through a sintered glass funnel. [Pg.684]

Oximes (compare Section III,74,B). The following procedure has wide application. Dissolve 0-5 g. of hydroxylamine hydrochloride in 2 ml. of water, add 2 ml. of 10 per cent, sodium hydroxide solution and 0-2 g. of the aldehyde (or ketone). If the latter is insoluble, add just sufficient alcohol to the mixture to give a clear solution. Heat the mixture under reflux for 10-15 minutes, and then cool in ice. If crystals separate, filter these off, and recrystallise from alcohol, dilute alcohol, benzene or light petroleum (b.p. 60-80°). If no solid separates on cooling, dilute with 2-3 volumes of water, filter the precipitated sohd, and recrystallise. [Pg.721]

Y-Phenylbutyric acid. Prepare amalgamated zinc from 120 g. of zinc wool contained in a 1-litre rovmd-bottomed flask (Section 111,50, IS), decant the liquid as completely as possible, and add in the following order 75 ml. of water, 180 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid, 100 ml. of pure toluene (1) and 50 g. of p benzoylpropionic acid. Fit the flask with a reflux condenser connected to a gas absorption device (Fig. II, 8, l,c), and boil the reaction mixture vigorously for 30 hours add three or four 50 ml. portions of concentrated hydrochloric acid at approximately six hour intervals during the refluxing period in order to maintain the concentration of the acid. Allow to cool to room temperature and separate the two layers. Dilute the aqueous portion with about 200 ml. of water and extract with three 75 ml. portions of ether. Combine the toluene layer with the ether extracts, wash with water, and dry over anhydrous magnesium or calcium sulphate. Remove the solvents by distillation under diminished pressure on a water bath (compare Fig. II, 37, 1), transfer the residue to a Claisen flask, and distil imder reduced pressure (Fig. II, 19, 1). Collect the y-phenylbutyric acid at 178-181°/19 mm. this solidifies on coohng to a colourless sohd (40 g.) and melts at 47-48°. [Pg.738]


See other pages where Sohds is mentioned: [Pg.250]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.410]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.417]    [Pg.468]    [Pg.469]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.578]    [Pg.584]    [Pg.600]    [Pg.601]    [Pg.626]    [Pg.631]    [Pg.646]    [Pg.648]    [Pg.699]    [Pg.699]    [Pg.731]    [Pg.732]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.747]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.165 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.17 , Pg.18 , Pg.64 , Pg.65 , Pg.69 , Pg.71 , Pg.72 , Pg.87 , Pg.113 , Pg.125 , Pg.127 , Pg.138 , Pg.139 , Pg.162 ]




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Bulk sohds

Copolymers sohd-state morphology

Decomposition sohd-state

Dispersions, sohd

Field sohd surfaces

Fraction sohd

Fuel cell sohd conducting oxide

Insoluble sohds

Municipal sohd waste

Network sohds

Nuclear magnetic resonance sohd-state

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy sohd-state

Porous sohds

Sohd aerosol

Sohd angle

Sohd electrolyzers

Sohd emulsion

Sohd matter

Sohd metal lattice

Sohd phase extraction

Sohd phase microextraction

Sohd phosphoric acid

Sohd polymer electrolyte

Sohd polymer electrolyte technology

Sohd polymers

Sohd separations

Sohd solubility

Sohd solutions

Sohd state

Sohd state NMR spectroscopy

Sohd state phase transitions

Sohd waste

Sohd-hquid extractions

Sohd-hquid separations, references

Sohd-liquid phase change materials

Sohd-phase carbohydrate synthesis

Sohds change

Sohds converts

Sohds entropy

Sohds handling

Sohds inorganic

Sohds pressure

Sohds recycle rate

Sohds solution

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